What’s On Friday

10 P.M. (CMT) CMT CROSSROADS: STEVIE NICKS AND LADY ANTEBELLUM Ms. Nicks, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, and Lady Antebellum, the Grammy- and Academy of Country Music Award-winning trio, collaborate for the first time in a concert recorded last spring in Los Angeles. The playlist features Ms. Nicks’s “Edge of 17,” “Landslide,” “Rhiannon” and “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around” and Lady Antebellum’s “Need You Now,” “Love Don’t Live Here” and “Golden.” (Above, Hillary Scott of Lady Antebellum, left, and Ms. Nicks.)

9 A.M. (ABC) LIVE WITH KELLY AND MICHAEL Kelly Ripa and Michael Strahan wrap their anniversary celebration with a countdown of the 10 best moments from their first year, as chosen by viewers.

7 P.M. (FX Movie Channel) THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON (2008) Brad Pitt received an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Benjamin Button, a man born in his 80s in 1918 New Orleans, who ages in reverse into the 21st century, in this adaptation of a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Cate Blanchett (below, with Mr. Pitt) is Daisy, the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in. And Taraji P. Henson, who also received an Oscar nomination, is the nursing home caretaker who raises him when his father abandons him. From Fitzgerald’s “odd, somewhat unpromising kernel, the director David Fincher and the screenwriter Eric Roth have cultivated a lush, romantic hothouse bloom, a film that shares only a title and a basic premise with its literary source,” A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times, adding that the film “sighs with longing and simmers with intrigue while investigating the philosophical conundrums and emotional paradoxes of its protagonist’s condition in a spirit that owes more to Jorge Luis Borges than to Fitzgerald.”

8 P.M. (Flix) THE PIANIST (2002) Adrien Brody, right, in an Oscar-winning role, portrays a Polish Jew who survives five years in the Nazi-controlled Warsaw ghetto. Roman Polanski won the Oscar for best director for what A. O. Scott, writing in The Times, called “a tour de force of claustrophobia and surreal desperation.” In “The Apostle” (1997), at 10:30, Robert Duvall stars as Sonny Dewey, an evangelical preacher who trades in his church and his cheating wife (Farrah Fawcett) for life on the lam in the rural South. The cast includes Miranda Richardson as the married focus of Sonny’s charm; and Billy Bob Thornton as a racist who proves that Sonny can achieve almost anything through his words. Mr. Duvall, who also wrote and directed the movie, received an Oscar nomination for best actor.

9 P.M. (Disney) WANDER OVER YONDER Jack McBrayer lends his voice to Wander, an intergalactic do-gooder who travels the galaxies with his trusty steed, Sylvia (April Winchell), to battle the forces of evil in this new animated comedy. The villains in this premiere episode are Lord Hater (Keith Ferguson), who wants to control the universe, and a ferocious flying dragon who has been parted from its egg.

9 P.M. (NBC) DATELINE NBC At 19, Rebecca Musser entered into an arranged marriage with Rulon T. Jeffs, the 85-year-old leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. When he died in 2002, she fled the polygamous sect and became a witness in exposing crimes within the organization now led by Rulon’s son Warren S. Jeffs, who had become one of the F.B.I.’s 10 Most Wanted fugitives. (In 2011, he was convicted of child sexual assault and sentenced to life in prison plus 20 years.) Here, Ms. Musser speaks with Keith Morrison about her decision to leave the church and her fight for justice, which she recounts in her book, “The Witness Wore Red.” “If that is holy and that is divine and that is heaven,” she says of the church, “I will take hell.”

10 P.M. (WE) KENDRA ON TOP A second season kicks off at the Playboy Mansion’s Halloween party, where Kendra Wilkinson-Baskett shows off the body she has nurtured through twice-daily workouts, hot yoga and a healthy diet. But her husband, the former pro football player Hank Baskett, isn’t so happy with her revealing costume choice. Neither are her agent or publicist, who lecture her on poor decisions.